Our position is:Money for Spanish-speaking students
should go to the most effective instruction, which is English immersion.

Bilingual education is on its last legs. A major blow was struck
four years ago when California passed a sweeping referendum ordering all-English
instruction in the state's public schools. An equally devastating thrust to the
vitals was delivered this month when voters in Massachusetts replaced bilingual
education with an intensive English-immersion program. Colorado voters did the
same.

The
two ballot initiatives mandate that public schools teach all classes in English.
Teachers may use a student's native language only to help explain a complex
question or theory. Together, the proposals signal the impending demise of a
faulty educational orthodoxy that has cheated thousands of Hispanic youngsters
of a better economic future. The doctrine flies in the face of reason and
experience.

For generations, schools expected immigrant children to learn
English through need and absorption. Learn it, they did, readily and eagerly
because their families understood it was vital to achievement. By contrast,
bilingual education has kept Hispanic students needlessly languishing for years
in bilingual programs, sometimes even into high school.

Indiana lawmakers have approved only a minimum of bonus aid for
the estimated 15,000 Hispanic students in public schools. Superintendent of
Public Instruction Suellen Reed unsuccessfully asked the 2001 session of the
General Assembly for $24 million to help children who can't speak English. At
the time, The Star urged that if such funding were granted, it carry specific
restrictions on how it would be spent.

The caveat was in order. Only immersion in English has proved
successful. After decades of experimentation, bilingual education is widely
discredited. Study after study showed lower student scores, higher dropout rates
and a lack of fluency in English. Moreover, Hispanic students who went through
bilingual programs have markedly depressed earnings when compared to their
Hispanic peers who were educated in English only.

If sense prevails, Massachusetts will be seen as the graveyard
of bilingual education.